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ack
when economist Paul Krugman was on an advisory board of Enron's, he wrote
an article for Fortune that lauded the company and mentioned
that he was on the board, though not that he got $50,000 for his services.
When he became a columnist for the New York Times, Krugman left
the board. He now flays Enron for practicing a corrupt "crony capitalism"
and the Bush administration for "dissembling" about its ties
to Enron. Should the Times can Krugman because he lacks journalistic
ethics? No. These sins failure to disclose relevant information,
hypocrisy seem fairly petty. The Times should end his column
for other reasons. It's repetitive and predictable: Krugman seems to have
only three or four column ideas (tax cuts are bad, private accounts in
Social Security are bad, Republicans are bad). It's intellectually thuggish:
Krugman caricatures opponents, falsely presents his opinions as "cold,
hard fact" accepted by all his fellow economists, and attributes
all disagreement with him to crankiness and dishonesty. He has become,
to some extent, a partisan hack, willing to make abrupt 180-degree turns
if necessary to criticize President Bush. Finally, he's a mediocre writer
at best, even making allowances for his being an economist. That companies
like Enron go bankrupt is a sign that markets work. The canning of a lousy
columnist would be another.
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